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Spatiotemporal influence of temperature, air quality, and urban environment on cause-specific mortality during hazy days.

Authors :
Ho, Hung Chak
Wong, Man Sing
Yang, Lin
Shi, Wenzhong
Yang, Jinxin
Bilal, Muhammad
Chan, Ta-Chien
Source :
Environment International. Mar2018, Vol. 112, p10-22. 13p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Haze is an extreme weather event that can severely increase air pollution exposure, resulting in higher burdens on human health. Few studies have explored the health effects of haze, and none have investigated the spatiotemporal interaction between temperature, air quality and urban environment that may exacerbate the adverse health effects of haze. We investigated the spatiotemporal pattern of haze effects and explored the additional effects of temperature, air pollution and urban environment on the short-term mortality risk during hazy days. We applied a Poisson regression model to daily mortality data from 2007 through 2014, to analyze the short-term mortality risk during haze events in Hong Kong. We evaluated the adverse effect on five types of cause-specific mortality after four types of haze event. We also analyzed the additional effect contributed by the spatial variability of urban environment on each type of cause-specific mortality during a specific haze event. A regular hazy day (lag 0) has higher all-cause mortality risk than a day without haze (odds ratio: 1.029 [1.009, 1.049]). We have also observed high mortality risks associated with mental disorders and diseases of the nervous system during hazy days. In addition, extreme weather and air quality contributed to haze-related mortality, while cold weather and higher ground-level ozone had stronger influences on mortality risk. Areas with a high-density environment, lower vegetation, higher anthropogenic heat, and higher PM 2.5 featured stronger effects of haze on mortality than the others. A combined influence of haze, extreme weather/air quality, and urban environment can result in extremely high mortality due to mental/behavioral disorders or diseases of the nervous system. In conclusion, we developed a data-driven technique to analyze the effects of haze on mortality. Our results target the specific dates and areas with higher mortality during haze events, which can be used for development of health warning protocols/systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
112
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128956362
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2017.12.001